News of Note
Where a post-mortem pipeline entails an s. 88(1)(d) bump, any CDA from life insurance should be paid out before Newco is introduced to the structure
In post-mortem pipeline transactions, the estate might transfer shares of “Investco” to “Newco” in exchange for a Newco promissory note, with Investco and Newco subsequently being amalgamated, thereby permitting access to bump treatment under s. 88(1)(d). However, the availability of the bump may be adversely affected if life insurance proceeds received by Investco were distributed out of its capital dividend account (CDA) to Newco (in turn, distributed by Newco to the estate).
In this regard, s. 88(1)(d)(i.1) provides that the cumulative bump room will be further reduced by not only taxable dividends that are deductible under s. 112 but also capital dividends received. Accordingly, the payment of a substantial capital dividend out of the CDA of Investco arising from the life insurance death benefit may entirely eliminate the bump room pursuant to s. 88(1)(d)(i.1)(B).
The purpose of s. 88(1)(d)(i.1) is to prevent the payment of tax-free dividends without any corresponding reduction in share basis so as to artificially increase the available bump room. However, applying s. 88(1)(d)(i.1) to capital dividends arising from life insurance implicitly assumes that a tax-free distribution has reduced inside basis without affecting outside basis, where, in fact, no outside basis was ever attributable to the insurance proceeds, i.e., the provision does not distinguish between capital dividends representing previously taxed economic value and those arising solely from statutory non-taxable amounts.
This anomaly can be avoided if the life insurance proceeds are paid out of the Investco CDA to the estate before Newco is introduced as part of the pipeline transaction.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of Henry Shew and Florence Marino, ”The interaction between corporate-owned life insurance and bump transaction,” Tax for the Owner-Manager, Vol. 20, No. 2, April 2020, p. 3 under s. 88(1)(d)(i.1).
We have translated 6 more CRA interpretations
We have translated a CRA interpretation released last week and a further 5 CRA interpretations released in June of 1999. Their descriptors and links appear below.
These are additions to our set of 3,530 full-text translations of French-language Technical Interpretation and Roundtable items (plus some ruling letters) of the Income Tax Rulings Directorate, which covers all of the last 26 ½ years of releases of such items by the Directorate. These translations are subject to our paywall (applicable after the 5th of each month).
There is no bump on the amalgamation following an intergenerational business transfer
In an intergenerational business transfer (“IBT”), there generally is no acquisition of control of the target company (“Targetco”) for tax purposes because its shares are sold to a corporation controlled by the seller's children (“Childco”), who are related to the sellers.
Accordingly, when there is a vertical amalgamation of Targetco and Childco, the cost of the target corporation's eligible assets cannot be bumped by virtue of the s. 88(1)(d.2) rule – which provides that if control of the target corporation was transferred between related persons, the relevant acquisition of control date for purposes of the bump calculation is the date of the last transfer between arm's length parties (generally establishing the historical cost), rather than the most recent transfer between non-arm's length parties.
S. 88(1)(d.3), which deems control to have been acquired by an unrelated person at the time of death, has no application to an IBT.
The absence of a bump is significant, for example, for agricultural corporations, where a substantial portion of the share value is often attributable to farmland.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of Julien Théberge, “Intergenerational Business Transfer: Appearance of Parity with a Third-Party Sale?”, Tax for the Owner-Manager, Vol. 20, No. 2, April 2020, p. 2 under s. 88(1)(d.2).
Parliament did not require the correction of subsequently-discovered errors in a return
It can be inferred that Parliament did not intend to impose an obligation to correct a subsequently discovered error in an income tax or GST/HST return given that it could have specified, and chose not to – see, for example:
- S. 32.2 of the Customs Act (requiring an importer who discovers a past error in reporting an importation to correct it); and
- Reg. 8401(6) (requiring the correction and reissuance of a T4 if a pension adjustment is altered for certain reasons, and there is a change in the amount of employment income previously reported).
It is suggested that it follows that a failure to correct such a subsequently discovered error is not a criminal offence (e.g., under ITA s. 239(1)(d), making it an offence to wilfully evade payment of taxes), and it should not trigger penalties that did not already apply at the time of filing. Such failure also is not a ground to permit the CRA to reassess beyond the normal reassessment deadline if the original filing had not constituted a misrepresentation attributable to carelessness or neglect (see ITA s. 152(4)(a)(i) and ETA s. 298(4)).
There remains the question of whether a lawyer or CPA would be in violation of any professional conduct rules by not addressing a subsequently discovered error, but it would seem that if the client is not obligated to act, nor should the advisor. Also note, for example, that an Ontario lawyer “must endeavor to obtain for the client the benefit of every remedy and defence authorized by law” under the Law Society of Ontario, Rules of Professional Conduct, Commentary to Rule 5.1-1.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of David Sherman and Balaji Katlai, “Is a taxpayer required to correct a past error?” Tax for the Owner-Manager, Vol. 20, No. 2, April 2020, p. 1 under s. 239(1)(d).
CRA indicates that a nursing home is not, and a typical rooming house is, a “housing unit” for flipped property purposes
Regarding whether a nursing home or a rooming house was a flipped property, CRA first indicated that it considered that a “housing unit is normally represented by a room, or a group of rooms, used for residential purposes, occupied by a person or group of persons, and which includes a certain number of characteristics such as a kitchen, bathroom, etc.”, and that the term “housing unit” was restricted to single housing unit.
CRA then stated:
Although a nursing home may contain elements of a housing unit (such as a kitchen, bathrooms, etc.), it is our view that a nursing home would generally not be considered a flipped property.
It is unclear whether this is reflecting a view that a nursing home is a care rather than residential facility (see Blanche’s Home Care).
Turning to a rooming house, where individual rooms are rented out but the residents share a kitchen and bathroom facilities, it stated:
[W]e would generally consider the rooming house to be a property that is one housing unit for purposes of the flipped property rules – i.e., it is a room or group of rooms used for residential purposes, occupied by a person or group of persons, with a certain number of elements such as a kitchen, bathroom, etc.
Even if each bedroom went beyond basic furnishings to include a mini fridge, table and basic cooking setup such as a small stove or hot plate, CRA considered that such room would not constitute a housing unit, so that the property would not be excluded from “housing unit” status through having multiple housing units.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of 18 December 2025 External T.I. 2025-1055741E5 under s. 12(13)(a).
CRA indicates that shares designated under s. 7(1.31) are not excluded from being identical properties for superficial-loss purposes
On January 1, 2021, an employee acquired one share of the employer with an FMV of $60, resulting in a benefit under s. 7(1)(a) of $60. On December 1, 2021, the employee acquired three shares with an FMV and resulting benefit of $80 per share. On December 15, 2021, the employee sold three shares for $70 per share and, pursuant to s. 7(1.31), identified the three shares acquired on December 1 as those disposed of so that it had a capital loss of $30. On January 1, 2022, the employee acquired one share with an FMV and resulting benefit of $50.
In finding that the superficial loss rule applied to such loss, CRA noted that ss. 7(1.3) and 7(1.31) may dictate the ordering of dispositions, but do not deem identical properties to not be identical. Furthermore, s. 47(3)(b) (deeming securities to which s. 7(1.31) applied not to be identical for s. 47(1) cost-averaging purposes), did not apply for superficial loss purposes.
However, applying the longstanding CRA administrative formula (SL = (Least of S, P and B)/S x L)), even though the superficial loss under s. 40(2)(g)(i) was the full $30 loss, it was reduced under the formula to $20, i.e., the number of shares held at the end of the 61-day period was two-thirds of the number of shares disposed of.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of 20 October 2025 External T.I. 2023-0972451E5 under s. 7(1.31).
CRA finds that Reg. 5907(8)(a) is limited to mergers of what are already foreign affiliates of a corporation resident in Canada
A resident individual wholly owned Canco, and also wholly owned FA1 which wholly owned FA2.
In November of a particular year, FA1 and FA2 were merged, with FA1 as the survivor. Then, that December, the individual transferred all of the shares of FA1 to Canco on a s. 85(1) rollover basis.
In confirming that Reg. 5907(8)(a) would not apply in respect of that merger to deem the taxation years of the two FAs to terminate and (in the case of FA1) restart with the merger for surplus-computation purposes because, at the time of the merger, FA1 and FA2 were not yet foreign affiliates of Canco, the Directorate first noted, as relevant context, that Reg. “5907(8)(a) is relevant to the computation under subsection 5905(3) for the purpose of determining the various initial surpluses or deficits of the foreign affiliate resulting from the merger in relation to a corporation resident in Canada,” and then stated:
The grammatical and ordinary meaning of the words “foreign affiliate of a corporation resident in Canada” found in paragraph 5907(8), read in their specific context with regard to the purpose of the foreign affiliate regime and, in particular, taking into account the close link between that paragraph and subsection 5905(3), demonstrates that those words refer to a foreign corporation having that status in relation to a corporation resident in Canada immediately following the merger.
A textual, contextual and purposive interpretation of the provision does not reveal any elements supporting a conclusion that the terms of paragraph 5907(8)(a) could have retroactive effect where the status referred to in the provision is acquired at a time subsequent to the merger.
Neal Armstrong. Summary of 14 January 2026 Internal T.I. 2023-0990701I7 F under Reg. 5907(8)(a).
Income Tax Severed Letters 8 April 2026
This morning's release of four severed letters from the Income Tax Rulings Directorate is now available for your viewing.
CRA treats a Roth 403(b) plan as an EBP but states that withdrawals out of it could qualify for the Canada-US Treaty, Art. XVIII(1) exemption
The taxpayer and her spouse, who currently reside in the United States, will immigrate to Canada upon or after retirement. They will then begin withdrawing funds from their US 403(b) plan (and the underlying Roth 403(b) account), to which the taxpayer had made after-tax contributions and (in the case of the underlying Roth 403(b) account) her spouse had made both pre-tax and after-tax contributions.
CRA stated that it “generally consider[s] a 403(b) plan, including the Roth 403(b) account to be an EBP [employee benefit plan]”. On this basis, amounts received from the plan would be included in income under s. 6(1)(g), subject to the exclusion in s. 6(1)(g)(ii) for returns of employee contributions that have not been previously deducted.
CRA indicated that a “403(b) plan qualifies as a pension for purposes of Art. XVIII of the Treaty.” However, IRC s. 107 excludes a minister’s housing allowance from U.S. taxable income. Accordingly, distributions received from the 403(b) plan by a resident of Canada that were designated as a minister's housing allowance would not be taxable in Canada pursuant to the exclusion in Art. XVIII for amounts that would be excluded from US taxable income if received by a US resident.
Neal Armstrong. Summaries of 13 June 2023 External T.I. 2022-0952971E5 under s. 6(1)(g) and Treaties – Income Tax Conventions – Art. 18.
CRA confirms that a beneficiary receiving a return of the deceased RCA member’s non-deductible contributions cannot then generate the missing deduction under s. 60(t)
CRA confirmed that a member's contributions to a retirement compensation arrangement (RCA) that were not deductible under s. 8(1)(m.2) were not deductible under s. 60(t) by the member’s surviving spouse (or other beneficiary) who received such amounts from the RCA after the member's death and included them in income under s. 56(1)(z) or s. 70(3). This scenario did not satisfy the requirement that the deduction was only available to the taxpayer who had made the contributions (not the surviving spouse).
Neal Armstrong. Summary of 30 May 2025 External T.I. 2022-0931461E5 under s. 60(t).
Neal H. Armstrong editor and contributor